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Dive into the research topics where Iain D. Campbell is active.

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Featured researches published by Iain D. Campbell.


Cell | 2007

Structural Basis of Integrin Activation by Talin

Kate L. Wegener; Anthony W. Partridge; Jaewon Han; Andrew R. Pickford; Robert C. Liddington; Mark H. Ginsberg; Iain D. Campbell

Regulation of integrin affinity (activation) is essential for metazoan development and for many pathological processes. Binding of the talin phosphotyrosine-binding (PTB) domain to integrin beta subunit cytoplasmic domains (tails) causes activation, whereas numerous other PTB-domain-containing proteins bind integrins without activating them. Here we define the structure of a complex between talin and the membrane-proximal integrin beta3 cytoplasmic domain and identify specific contacts between talin and the integrin tail required for activation. We used structure-based mutagenesis to engineer talin and beta3 variants that interact with comparable affinity to the wild-type proteins but inhibit integrin activation by competing with endogenous talin. These results reveal the structural basis of talins unique ability to activate integrins, identify an interaction that could aid in the design of therapeutics to block integrin activation, and enable engineering of cells with defects in the activation of multiple classes of integrins.


Cell | 1992

The three-dimensional structure of the tenth type III module of fibronectin: an insight into RGD-mediated interactions.

Alison L. Main; Timothy S. Harvey; Martin Baron; Jonathan Boyd; Iain D. Campbell

The solution structure of the tenth type III module of fibronectin has been determined using nuclear magnetic resonance techniques. The molecule has a fold similar to that of immunoglobulin domains, with seven beta strands forming two antiparallel beta sheets, which pack against each other. Both beta sheets contribute conserved hydrophobic residues to a compact core. The topology is more similar to that of domain 2 of CD4, PapD, and the extracellular domain of the human growth hormone receptor than to that of immunoglobulin C domains. The module contains an Arg-Gly-Asp sequence known to be involved in cell adhesion. This tripeptide is solvent exposed and lies on a conformationally mobile loop between strands F and G, consistent with its cell adhesion function.


Molecular Cell | 2003

Structural determinants of integrin recognition by talin.

Begoña Garcı́a-Alvarez; José M. de Pereda; David A. Calderwood; Tobias S. Ulmer; David R. Critchley; Iain D. Campbell; Mark H. Ginsberg; Robert C. Liddington

The binding of cytoplasmic proteins, such as talin, to the cytoplasmic domains of integrin adhesion receptors mediates bidirectional signal transduction. Here we report the crystal structure of the principal integrin binding and activating fragment of talin, alone and in complex with fragments of the beta 3 integrin tail. The FERM (four point one, ezrin, radixin, and moesin) domain of talin engages integrins via a novel variant of the canonical phosphotyrosine binding (PTB) domain-NPxY ligand interaction that may be a prototype for FERM domain recognition of transmembrane receptors. In combination with NMR and mutational analysis, our studies reveal the critical interacting elements of both talin and the integrin beta 3 tail, providing structural paradigms for integrin linkage to the cell interior.


Cell | 1993

The GTPase dynamin binds to and is activated by a subset of SH3 domains

Ivan Gout; Ritu Dhand; Ian Hiles; Michael J. Fry; George Panayotou; Pamela Das; Oanh Truong; Nicholas F. Totty; J. Justin Hsuan; Grant W. Booker; Iain D. Campbell; Michael D. Waterfield

Src homology 3 (SH3) domains have been implicated in mediating protein-protein interactions in receptor signaling processes; however, the precise role of this domain remains unclear. In this report, affinity purification techniques were used to identify the GTPase dynamin as an SH3 domain-binding protein. Selective binding to a subset of 15 different recombinant SH3 domains occurs through proline-rich sequence motifs similar to those that mediate the interaction of the SH3 domains of Grb2 and Abl proteins to the guanine nucleotide exchange protein, Sos, and to the 3BP1 protein, respectively. Dynamin GTPase activity is stimulated by several of the bound SH3 domains, suggesting that the function of the SH3 module is not restricted to protein-protein interactions but may also include the interactive regulation of GTP-binding proteins.


Cell | 1996

Solution structure of a pair of calcium-binding epidermal growth factor-like domains: implications for the Marfan syndrome and other genetic disorders.

Ak Downing; Vroni Knott; Jörn M. Werner; C.M Cardy; Iain D. Campbell; Penny A. Handford

The nuclear magnetic resonance structure of a covalently linked pair of calcium-binding (cb) epidermal growth factor-like (EGF) domains from human fibrillin-1, the protein defective in the Marfan syndrome, is described. The two domains are in a rigid, rod-like arrangement, stabilized by interdomain calcium binding and hydrophobic interactions. We propose a model for the arrangement of fibrillin monomers in microfibrils that reconciles structural and antibody binding data, and we describe a set of disease-causing mutations that provide the first clues to the specificity of cbEFG interactions. The residues involved in stabilizing the domain linkage are highly conserved in fibrillin, fibulin, thrombomodulin, and the low density lipoprotein receptor. We propose that the relative orientation of tandem cbEGF domains in these proteins is similar, but that in others, including Notch, pairs adopt a completely different conformation.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 1973

Resolution enhancement of protein PMR spectra using the difference between a broadened and a normal spectrum

Iain D. Campbell; Christopher M. Dobson; Ruth Williams; António V. Xavier

Abstract Methods are described which improve the resolution of a complex NMR spectrum by subtracting a broadened spectrum from the original one. The broadening is brought about either by multiplying a transient response by an exponentially decaying function or by introducing a paramagnetic ion. The methods are analysed and are illustrated using the 270 MHz spectra of human and hen egg white lysozymes. The improvement in resolution is such that relaxation and shift measurements may be performed in regions of the spectrum previously thought inaccessible.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 1993

Epidermal growth factor-like modules

Iain D. Campbell; Peer Bork

Numerous copies of domains, or modules, with similarity recognizable from sequence analysis, are being found in a wide variety of different proteins. New information on the structure and distribution of modules in the epidermal growth factor superfamily is presented.


Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics | 1996

Structure and distribution of modules in extracellular proteins

Peer Bork; Downing Ak; Bruno Kieffer; Iain D. Campbell

It has become standard practice to compare new amino-acid and nucleotide sequences with existing ones in the rapidly growing sequence databases. This has led to the recurring identification of certain sequence patterns, usually corresponding to less than 300 amino-acids in length. Many of these identifiable sequence regions have been shown to fold up to form a ‘domain’ structure; they are often called protein ‘modules’ (see definitions below). Proteins that contain such modules are widely distributed in biology, but they are particularly common in extracellular proteins.


Nature | 2003

Pathogenic bacteria attach to human fibronectin through a tandem beta-zipper.

Ulrich Schwarz-Linek; Jörn M. Werner; Andrew R. Pickford; S. Gurusiddappa; J.H. Kim; Ewa S. Pilka; John A. G. Briggs; T.S. Gough; Magnus Höök; Iain D. Campbell; Jennifer R. Potts

Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pyogenes, two important human pathogens, target host fibronectin (Fn) in their adhesion to and invasion of host cells. Fibronectin-binding proteins (FnBPs), anchored in the bacterial cell wall, have multiple Fn-binding repeats in an unfolded region of the protein. The bacterium-binding site in the amino-terminal domain (1–5F1) of Fn contains five sequential Fn type 1 (F1) modules. Here we show the structure of a streptococcal (S. dysgalactiae) FnBP peptide (B3) in complex with the module pair 1F12F1. This identifies 1F1- and 2F1-binding motifs in B3 that form additional antiparallel β-strands on sequential F1 modules—the first example of a tandem β-zipper. Sequence analyses of larger regions of FnBPs from S. pyogenes and S. aureus reveal a repeating pattern of F1-binding motifs that match the pattern of F1 modules in 1–5F1 of Fn. In the process of Fn-mediated invasion of host cells, therefore, the bacterial proteins seem to exploit the modular structure of Fn by forming extended tandem β-zippers. This work is a vital step forward in explaining the full mechanism of the integrin-dependent FnBP-mediated invasion of host cells.


Cell | 1996

Solution Structure of the Link Module: A Hyaluronan-Binding Domain Involved in Extracellular Matrix Stability and Cell Migration

Daisuke Kohda; Craig J. Morton; Ashfaq A Parkar; Hideki Hatanaka; Fuyuhiko Inagaki; Iain D. Campbell; Anthony J. Day

Link modules are hyaluronan-binding domains found in proteins involved in the assembly of extracellular matrix, cell adhesion, and migration. The solution structure of the Link module from human TSG-6 was determined and found to consist of two alpha helices and two antiparallel beta sheets arranged around a large hydrophobic core. This defines the consensus fold for the Link module superfamily, which includes CD44, cartilage link protein, and aggrecan. The TSG-6 Link module was shown to interact with hyaluronan, and a putative binding surface was identified on the structure. A structural database search revealed close similarity between the Link module and the C-type lectin domain, with the predicted hyaluronan-binding site at an analogous position to the carbohydrate-binding pocket in E-selectin.

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Jörn M. Werner

University of Southampton

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Anthony J. Day

Wellcome Trust Centre for Cell-Matrix Research

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